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The Cook
Islands [ˈkʊk
ˈailəndz] (help·info)
(Cook Islands
Māori: Kūki 'Āirani)
are a
self-governing
parliamentary
democracy in
free association
with New
Zealand. The
fifteen small
islands in this
South Pacific
Ocean country
have a total
land area of 240
square
kilometres
(92.7 sq mi),
but the Cook
Islands
Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ)
covers 1.8
million square
kilometres (0.7
million sq mi)
of ocean.[1]
The main
population
centres are on
the island of
Rarotonga
(c.10,000),
where there is
an international
airport. There
is also a much
larger
population of
Cook Islanders
in New Zealand,
particularly the
North Island; in
the 2006 census,
58,008
self-identified
as being of
ethnic Cook
Island Māori
descent.[2]
With over 90,000
visitors
travelling to
the islands in
2006, tourism is
the country's
number one
industry, and
the leading
element of the
economy, far
ahead of
offshore
banking, pearls,
marine and fruit
exports.
Defence is the
responsibility
of New Zealand,
in consultation
with the Cook
Islands and at
its request. In
recent times,
the Cook Islands
have adopted an
increasingly
independent
foreign policy.